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problematically

ADVERB
  1. in such a way as to pose a problem

How To Use problematically In A Sentence

  • But again, perhaps problematically, they are beautiful statues – inspiring, optimistic, and utopian; totems to the radiant future that was always promised, but never quite arrived.
  • Nor does it unproblematically endorse modernity and globalization which, via colonialism, postcolonial dependence, and transnational capitalist encompassment, have fuelled the grim conditions now widely noted.
  • The problem that Q Grrl seems to have with ‘trans politics’* - that the experiences and oppression of gender-variant people who do not identify as trans, or who only partially or problematically ID as trans, are sometimes erased by trans politics - is, I agree, a problem. Language around trans, how it works, how it doesn’t…
  • Now because all is here gradually incorporated with the understanding -- inasmuch as in the first place we judge problematically; then accept assertorically our judgement as true; lastly, affirm it as inseparably united with the understanding, that is, as necessary and apodeictical -- we may safely reckon these three functions of modality as so many momenta of thought. The Critique of Pure Reason
  • And most problematically, directing the programme's assets to Hong Kong shares irked the Shanghai-centric China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) and its boss, Shang Fulin.
  • Death, from this perspective, seems unproblematically universal, a simple, irreducible fact of our nature, unyieldingly the same across all societies and throughout time.
  • After the pictorial revolutions of Cubism and abstractionism, it was no longer possible to pretend that surface and structure could unproblematically be melded in the production of a representational picture space.
  • They ignore ambiguities in their own writing, and in their interview material, which they treat as unproblematically quotable.
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